Saturday, August 31, 2013

My August 2013 Running Report

In August I continued increasing my running mileage, amassing a total of 132.6 miles.  The longest run was for 10 miles, and I ran on 30 out of the month's 31 days. Back in May I wouldn't have thought this possible, what with the plantar fasciitis in my right foot causing pain in the heel and arch.  But I have been careful to wear snug-fitting shoes with thick soles, and have faithfully done daily stretching exercises to help alleviate the problem.  The result has been that this condition no longer limits me with my running.  Still, I am right now a bit overweight and as such am not running as well as I could were I to weigh, more optimally, about 15-20 pounds less. 

I still intend to run a couple of half-marathon races here in Gainesville this fall, the first to take place on September 28.  I deeply wish that the weather will have cooled down a bit by that time.  This must be the most unpleasantly hot and humid summer I've experienced in recent memory...

Friday, August 30, 2013

Standing, Codependency, and Personal Responsibility

I've recently had two situations cropping up in the workplace (where I work is immaterial to this discussion) when questions of mandated overtime and off/day staffing came into play.  In one instance, I (and others) were told to stay late a couple of hours overtime one morning...something that annoyed me when it happened but in the long run was beneficial due to the extra money coming in to me.  A co-worker also having to put in the extra time decided that we should see a union steward the next day because a different crew on another shift was unjustly being deprived of the overtime that they had signed up for (unlike us).  I ignored this proposal, because I didn't feel that I was the aggrieved party.  Maybe I was a little annoyed at the overtime, but it's hard to feel the "victim" in a situation when people are essentially throwing money at me.  No, the potentially aggrieved party were the other workers who had sought out the overtime and didn't get it.  They were the ones with "standing" in this circumstance, not me.  Simply informing them what happened was enough...they could then decide for themselves what, if anything, to do about it if they wished.

Similarly, the duty schedule for this weekend's Labor Day holiday was posted a few days ago.  One co-worker was incorrectly scheduled in for two days while I got both of my desired days off.  Once again, someone else had "standing" to address the problem with management, not me.  She didn't, though, and I thus have a long weekend coming up.

In order to avoid codependent behavior, I have to take different situations concerning others and determine, if a possible injustice has occurred, how much it actually negatively affects me...or whether someone else adversely affected wants me to take responsibility to fixing "their" problem for them.  A codependent personality will habitually take on the burden of fixing others' problems for them, instead of expecting them to speak for themselves, as they should...

Standing is an important legal concept in our system of justice.  Appeals are often thrown out of court by judges because the party filing them doesn't have a direct relationship to the cases involved.  Standing is established when a party to a case can demonstrate how it legitimately affects them.  But standing is a more universal principle that ultimately demands that we individually demonstrate responsibility for handling our own affairs without passively always expecting others to take them up for us...

Thursday, August 29, 2013

Tim Tebow an Asset to NFL Football

In spite of the fact that I am a long-time Gainesville resident and root for my University of Florida Gators team, I am not exactly what you might call a fan of Tim Tebow...at least not to the extent that many others are.  Not that I have anything personally against the man, you see.  As far as I can tell, there aren't enough people in professional football with the kind of character and positive attitude that he consistently displays, and often under very stressful circumstances.  And I agree with the bigshot highly-played professional media sports analysts who point out his deficiencies in the quarterback position. Slowness in reading opposing defenses on the field and often wild inaccuracy in passing are probably Tebow's two main, glaring faults.  I've heard some critics also say that his footing and arm motions aren't up to par with other quarterbacks in the National Football League.  Maybe that's all true, but I do know one thing about him that others seem determined to overlook: Tim Tebow is a winner.

Football is a team sport and involves players combining their own particular skills in concert with each other to achieve victory.  Tim Tebow is an exhorter and somehow gets his teammates on the field together playing with fervency and a belief that they will prevail.  In 2011, the only year he was allowed to consistently start as quarterback, he led his Denver Broncos from their division's cellar to its championship...and then defeated defending Super Bowl champion Pittsburgh in the first round of the playoffs.  Then a few weeks later he was summarily traded away to the Jets, who subsequently squandered their investment and then let him go.  Now he's with New England and he may or may not make the final team roster at the end of the exhibition season.  His passing statistics have never been good, but he is a clutch player who takes charge in close games and pulls out improbable win after win.  He is more a throwback to the old days of football that allowed for more of a diversity in talents. I remember the 1969 Minnesota Vikings who had as quarterback an incredibly erratic passer in Joe Capp: all they did that year was go to the Super Bowl!  But Tebow has an added threat to defenses that his critics sell him short on: he is a strong, punishing runner who reminds me of the Miami Dolphin great Larry Csonka. 

I remember one game last year when Tebow, while playing for the Jets at home, was sent in for a play and burst through the opposing defense, gaining a swath of yardage and putting his team on the verge of a touchdown.  Right after the play, he was on fire with enthusiasm, pumping up and exciting the entire stadium in the process. Then he was promptly removed to the sidelines, starting QB Mark Sanchez came back in, and the drive completely fizzled out...not to mention the enthusiasm of the stadium fans.   

That's not how you handle an asset like Tim Tebow.

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Not a "Rookie" Mistake

In the last exhibition game that they played, which was against the cross-town rival New York Giants, the New York Jets were still struggling with their quarterback lineup.  Not exactly inspiring the greatest confidence in the world, their quarterback for the past few years, Mark Sanchez, had a good enough preseason for coach Rex Ryan to announce him as the starter for this upcoming regular season.  Rookie Geno Smith, who many had touted as being the better quarterback, didn't do so well and was regulated to backup.  Sanchez played the first part of the Giants game while Smith came in later for the second half.  The Jets found themselves up 14-13 when they got the ball deep in their own territory, by their own goal line.  Smith went back to pass and, scrambling in the backfield, inadvertently stepped out of the back of his own end zone, causing a safety and giving the Giants a 15-14 lead.  Coach Ryan was evidently so miffed at this that he took Smith out of the game on the next series and put in his starter Sanchez...who subsequently suffered a shoulder injury in this essentially meaningless game.  Ryan came under a lot of criticism for his decision to play Sanchez, but to me saying and doing boneheaded things is what this dude is all about.  What bothered me about it all is what a (probably well-paid) football analyst on TV said about Geno Smith's safety: he called it a "rookie mistake".

I don't know how to play rugby, folks.  I'm sure the rules are such that if I were out on the field during a game, I would be lost as to what I should be doing.  But even with my profound ignorance about this sport, I already know, without having ever played it for even a minute, that I probably don't want to step out of bounds around my own goal while holding the ball.  Geno Smith was the class of the high school football world as a quarterback, which enabled him to attend a major college like West Virginia, where he succeeded so well that he was drafted as a top prospect into the National Football League.  After all these years of him practically living football, I think that he already knew that you don't step out of your own end zone holding the football!  He just made a mistake...don't we all from time to time.  But it had nothing to do with being a "rookie": they have end zones even in neighborhood sandlot games that little kids play!

It's true that as one progresses within a sport to a more advanced level, the tempo picks up and the strategies are more complicated, putting additional mental stress on the player.  But when a player who happens to be a freshman in college or a first-year rookie in the pros makes an error, it is often a simple lapse of judgement or perception and has nothing to do with lack of experience.  For announcers and analysts to throw out the "rookie/freshman mistake" line in these instances just makes me want to groan (and change the channel)...

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Return to Outdoor Writing

It's been a while since I sat down outside to do some blog writing.  Either I write something on my laptop at home (at the dining room table) or I go inside a comfortable-but-noisy coffee shop.  Back in 2007 when I began this blog, I would be in the habit of writing blog articles after stopping off at one of two local Starbucks on the way to my work shift, which then began at 3:30 PM. The typically hot weather wasn't so pleasant, but it seemed that my ability to drum up topics and expound upon them was enhanced more with outdoor writing.

Maybe, especially with my old home town of Gainesville once again packed with tens of thousands of college students, I'll just forgo the indoors and hang out outside, where more seating is usually (but not always) available.  That certainly was the case for me today.  Besides, we're now nearing the end of August and cooler times, hopefully, are just around the corner...

Monday, August 26, 2013

Finally Finished Wizard's First Rule by Terry Goodkind

Terry Goodkind's books dominate the shelves in the fantasy section of bookstores.  His Sword of Truth series is his trademark achievement, spanning twelve (or more?) volumes, periodically putting him at the top of the bestseller list and no doubt making him a very rich man.  Yet when I recently got on the Internet and checked out a list of the top 25 fantasy series (George R.R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire at the top of it), Goodkind's presence was nowhere seen...not even among the supplementary "honorable mention" list.  I myself had a bit of difficulty last year with the first book, Wizard's First Rule, getting through a few hundred pages (it is gigantic) and finally putting it down in frustration.  Not only did I discover that I felt an irrational aversion to this fantasy world of magic and swords (and the accompanying gore and violence), but I also experienced the same feeling that I had when reading Christopher Paolini's Eragon series: both authors probed the thoughts and intentions of their characters far too much instead of letting each story's actions and dialogue reveal their personalities as the plot progressed.  This, to me, took away some of the natural mystery and suspense that could have sustained me as a reader.  However, with Goodkind at least (Paolini is FAR too ponderous), I decided to give him another chance.  So I went back to Wizard's First Rule and read the whole damned thing from beginning to end.  And a funny thing happened: I began to like it!

It isn't quite so clear at the beginning of Wizard's First Rule, but as I read through it, I came to feel that Terry Goodkind is doing more than just spinning a yarn set in an imaginary fantasy setting.  He is also laying out a philosophy for living that involves people taking responsibility for themselves while redefining the notions of what truly constitutes compassion, and how important the method is to achieving one's means.  These are significant, heady topics, and Goodkind delves into them...at least in the first book.  I'm getting myself ready now for the second in the series, titled Stone of Tears... Oh by the way, I read up on Goodkind and he appears to be a follower of Ayn Rand's objectivism philosophy.  How that point of view is reflected in his writings should prove interesting to discover as I read on.

As for the title Wizard's First Rule, what does it mean?  Simply that, in the pantheon of rules that the wizards of Goodkind's imaginary realm have listed, there stands one principle high above the others: people are stupid and will believe whatever they WANT to believe, regardless of the facts!  You know what, that sounds like MY first rule as well!

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Visible Nova in Delphinus Detected

Late yesterday afternoon I attended my third planetarium show at the facility in Santa Fe College, here in Gainesville.  Once again James Albury hosted the event, which featured a movie adapted for domed theaters about black holes...narrated by Lian Neeson.  It was O.K., I suppose, although I've gotten more information and enlightenment on the subject from watching Science Channel shows like Wormhole.  Still, I enjoyed the experience of going inside the planetarium, sitting down in a comfortable chair, and digging the surroundings.  And at the conclusion of the program, Mr. Albury once again gave a synopsis of the night sky for this time of year...and with a special addition.

Our host announced that a few days ago, a nova explosion was detected in the constellation Delphinus, located a little northeast of Aquila.  The star, which was originally "seen" at magnitude +17, much too dim for the naked eye, suddenly brightened to where it is, at last report, +4.9...not exactly bright against the background of stars but still visible to the naked eye and certainly detectable to one (like myself) who is very familiar with the normal star patterns of that region of the sky.  Last night I went out to see it, but as luck would have it, the sky was overcast...as it currently is today so far.  Later this evening I'll go check it out, if the clouds have cleared out...

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Snowball Earth, Among Other Prehistoric Disasters

I've always been interested in the origins and development of the Earth, both in its geological context and in that of the evolution of life.  I am also a subscriber to Netflix, at least the streaming Netflix which much too often comes up severely lacking with its offerings of movies and shows.  This time around, though, I found on it a four-part television series titled Prehistoric Disasters that explored the Earth's distant past through four key disasters that struck it over the eons.

The four "disasters" were the formation of the Moon through the collision between early Earth and a minor planet, the 25-million year long lapse into a completely ice-packed "snowball" status covering the entire globe some 650 million years ago, the eruption of a supervolcano in what is now Siberia causing a chain of events leading to excessive global warming and mass extinctions 250 million years ago, and the hypothesized collision of an asteroid with Earth about 63 million years ago causing the end of the age of the dinosaurs.  I was especially interested in that strange "snowball Earth"...

Earth throughout its span of existence has gone through an extensive cycle of ice ages, when ice glaciers would flow far south of the polar regions and into more normally temperate climate zones.  But 650 million years ago the ice passed a threshold of latitude and went on to cover the planet with ice, and very thick ice at that (several hundred meters).  The cause: depletion of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere due to loss of this gas as it combined with solid material through excessive weathering from the then-single, huge continental mass lying on the equator and then settled on the sea bottom, far away from the atmosphere.  The advance of the ice sped up the process of global cooling because the ice's reflectivity of sunlight was much higher than the liquid ocean's, sending the sun's heat back out into space instead of absorbing it into the Earth.  Life at that time, for billions of years ongoing as a matter of fact, was composed of unicellular organisms, mainly bacteria.  Nearly all of the species died out, leaving only those few that could adapt through evolution.  After the ice cover eventually receded from the heat generated by massive volcanic eruptions 25 million years later, life began evolving rapidly into more complex forms...but only after the "snowball" period.

By all accounts, the "snowball" period in our planet's past was a singular, nonrepeating event.  That bothers me a little and keeps me from completely accepting it, even though there seems to be empirical evidence that it occurred.  I would have expected at least of handful of other "snowballs", too, in the records.  But if it was truly the only time that Earth was completely encased in thick, thick ice...and for millions of years at that, then to me this has to be the most incredible period of its past. 

Friday, August 23, 2013

Three Old Miami Dolphins Shun President

This past Tuesday the President received the 1972 Miami Dolphins team at the White House East Room as they together celebrated forty years of being the only team to go completely undefeated in a National Football League season...throughout that year's regular season, divisional and conference playoffs, and culminating with a Super Bowl victory.   Hall of Fame Dolphin greats Bob Griese, Larry Little, and Larry Csonka were among those there, as well as legendary coach Don Shula.  The current Miami Dolphins owner Stephen Ross footed the bill to bring them to Washington, which I thought was a nice gesture on his part.  But three of those '72 Dolphins players spurned the event because they said they were politically opposed to the sitting President.  Jim Langer, Bob Kuechenberg, and Manny Fernandez not only didn't attend, but they had to throw in some political trash talk into something that was a nonpolitical visit to their elected Head of State.  It could have been Republican President Romney instead of Democratic President Obama for all the difference it makes: in my opinion these three players, who obviously were under no compulsion from any one side to attend, are lacking in basic civics education and appreciation.  We live in a representative democracy, and as such, will sometimes collectively elect people into leadership positions with whom we, as individuals, have political differences.  Still, we should respect the PROCESS and the POSITION to honor the results of those elections and thereby respect whoever happens to be holding office at a particular time.  I wonder, had Romney been in there and held this commemoration, whether some of the more liberal members of that '72 Dolphins team would have shunned him.  There's no way of knowing for sure, but if that had happened it would have been just as wrong as what these three did.  For the record, by the way, owner Ross happens to be a proud Republican who clearly gets it when it comes to truly appreciating what it means to live in a democratic republic...as well as being a class act.  Too bad that some don't...

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Football Teams I'm Rooting For and Against

I can't tell you which teams will be the best in professional and college football this 2013 season, but I still have my own favorites...some of them will undoubtedly flop!  I decided to pick at least one team from each NFL division and one from the major NCAA conferences to cheer for and boo against, and here they are:

NFL: AMERICAN CONFERENCE
EAST
Cheer: Miami Dolphins, of course
Boo: New England Patriots
SOUTH
Cheer: Jacksonville Jaguars
Boo: Houston Texans
NORTH
Cheer: Baltimore Ravens
Boo: Pittsburgh Steelers
WEST
Cheer: Kansas City Chiefs
Boo: Denver Broncos

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
EAST
Cheer: New York Giants
Boo: Dallas Cowboys
SOUTH
Cheer: Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Boo: New Orleans Saints
NORTH
Cheer: Chicago Bears
Boo: Detroit Lions
WEST
Cheer: Seattle Seahawks
Boo: St. Louis Rams

NCAA COLLEGE FOOTBALL
SEC CONFERENCE
EAST
Cheer: Florida Gators
Boo: Georgia Bulldogs
WEST
Cheer: LSU Tigers
Boo: Alabama Crimson Tide

BIG TEN CONFERENCE
Cheer: Michigan State Spartans
Boo: Ohio State Buckeyes

BIG 12 CONFERENCE
Cheer: Kansas State Wildcats
Boo: Oklahoma Sooners

PAC 12 CONFERENCE
Cheer: Oregon Ducks
Boo: USC Condoms

Oh, and I need to mention independent Notre Dame, a team that I traditionally root against.  I will be booing them again this year...

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

TV Science Shows: More Math, Please

I appreciate much of the science programming I see on television when it is available.  I especially like shows about cosmology, physics, and astronomy.  Usually it is the Science Channel that provides this programming.  Shows like Wormhole and Wonders of the Universe are great, and anything narrated by Morgan Freeman (admittedly NOT a scientist) or physicists Michio Kaku and Brian Cox are interesting to watch.  I like the popularization of cutting edge scientific research, and wish there was more programming available like this.  But although I enjoy the intriguing material that is presented, I feel that there is still a massive cognitive gulf between professional scientists and the lay observer.  The chief cause of this gulf is the massive difference in mastery of the mathematics necessary to fully understand much of the theory and method.

Unfortunately, mathematics in itself isn't that glamorous.  But if more complex and advanced mathematics are introduced and explained in combination with various discoveries and theories, I believe that many viewers, myself included, would be able to catch on and more fully appreciate not only the exciting scientific advances that are going on today, but also better grasp some of the limitations and disagreements that cause scientists within a particular field to go down divergent paths with their theories and speculation.

In no field is the need for a deeper understanding of underlying mathematics more felt than in physics, especially that which is concerned about the origin and nature of our universe.  For one physicist to enumerate more than ten dimensions (string theory) while another reduces everything to just one dimension makes me scratch my head in frustration.  I'd like a little more in-depth probing of their thought processes than just see them sitting around throwing out their ideas, which may or may not be sufficiently backed up by empirical research or mathematically reasoned theory...

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Upcoming Running Race Prospects for Me

I thought it might be a good idea for me to list the upcoming running races that I have an interest in entering.  I'll stay away from most of them, I'm sure...not because I physically can't handle the race load, but rather because these events cost some money.  A little spent here and there is reasonable, but there is something to be said against overdoing it, too.  The locations are all Gainesville unless otherwise specified...

August 23 (Friday)...Fit2Run Cross Country Challenge (10K event) (off West Newberry Road)
September 28 (Saturday)...chORD Half-Marathon (on UF campus)
October 5 (Saturday)...Jacksonville Marine Corps Half-Marathon
October 20 (Sunday)...Running for the Bay Half-Marathon (in Apalachicola)
October 27 (Sunday)...Light House Loop Half-Marathon (in Port Orange)
November 9 (Saturday)...InnerAct Alliance Half-Marathon (in Lakeland)
November 16 (Saturday)...Tom Walker Memorial Half-Marathon (on Hawthorne Trail)
December 14 (Saturday)...Season of Hope 15K (on Hawthorne Trail)
December 29 (Sunday)...Jacksonville Bank Half-Marathon
2014: January 19 (Sunday)...Ocala Half-Marathon
February 16 (Sunday)...FivePoints Half-Marathon

I'm sure other races will sprout up from time to time, and Florida is full of half-marathons during the winter months.  But at least through February next year, the preceding pool of races offer me the best choices.  There are four half-marathons that I definitely want to run: chORD on September 28, Tom Walker Memorial on November 16, Ocala on January 19, and FivePoints on February 16.  Also, it would be cool to fit in a race that involved a little travel. That Jacksonville race on December 29 may be a stretch, but I've never run there before...

Monday, August 19, 2013

Good Ten-Mile Run Today

This afternoon I woke up (I work the graveyard shift) and felt a little out of sorts, but I resolved to go out anyway and try to run a bit.  It being in the oppressively hot 90's outdoors, I decided to go down to my local gym and run the treadmill.  First I was going to run 3-4 miles, but as I went along I kept going.  And going.  And going!  After a while, I realized that this was going to be a very good, long run...so why not go for 10 miles?  And that I did, at my usual pace and accomplishing it in 89 minutes 48 seconds.  I feel great right now, a few hours after the run.  And that includes my right foot, which had been giving me some problems going back to March.

Ten miles is the furthest I've run since the 13.1 I did in the Orange Blossom Half-Marathon in Tavares, Florida back in  March.  And unless I am actually running in an official half-marathon race, ten miles is my preset maximum for a run.  So I feel I'm ready for next month's half-marathon at the University of Florida.  I know this run I did today was a treadmill run and not a road run, but I am not going outside to do any long runs until the temperature comes down a bit...

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Paynes Prairie, South of Gainesville

When I first moved to Gainesville in 1977, and for years afterward, the grassland area south of town known as Paynes Prairie was always striking when I passed across it, either on US 441 or I-75.  In this part of Florida trees dominate, but in Paynes Prairie they clear away and one can see far off into the distance.  In this sense it reminds me of South Florida, where I grew up.  About a century ago, it was the bottom of a shallow lake called Lake Alachua.  But when there is a heavy rainfall season, it once again becomes essentially a very marshy lake.  Alligators abound here, and there is a bison herd.  There is a state park here, as well as a park for University of Florida staff, faculty, and students at adjacent Lake Wauberg.

The grasslands are probably still around, but probably somewhere off from the two aforementioned through-roads.  From where we passed through, all I can see now are low-lying bushes...not as spectacular of a view as I was used to behold.  There is a pier running east into the prairie off US 441 northbound side, close to the northern end, where visitors can walk safely "into" Paynes Prairie and stand at its end, which is an observation platform.  I think this might be a good place to go star-gazing sometime.

Here are a couple of not-so-revealing shots of Paynes Prairie taken from I-75 while I was riding (not driving) on it the other day...



Saturday, August 17, 2013

McDonald's Sign: Thirty Minute Sitting Limit

We were coming back yesterday to Gainesville from Lakeland when we pulled into a McDonald's off I-75 in Dade City.  It was one of the friendliest McDonald's I've ever been to and the service was excellent.  There was only one problem with the place as I saw it: there was a prominent sign there telling customers to limit their visits there to thirty minutes.  Longer than that they considered as "loitering".  I've seen this sort of sign at the McDonald's in Gainesville which is on US 441 a block from the University of Florida campus.  What gives here? Isn't that sign something of an affront, essentially telling customers to pay up and then get lost?

My instincts tell me that, as long as you are continually getting up and buying stuff from time to time, these McDonald's managers wouldn't care if you stayed there the whole day.  After all, they try to bring in longer-staying customers with their free Wi-Fi and the espresso coffee drinks they offer, obviously wanting to siphon off some of those free-spending Starbucks customers (who tend to stay glued to their seats for long stretches).  The problem I see that probably prompted the signs is twofold:  sometimes people will wander into an establishment like a McDonald's just for a place to sit...many of these may be homeless.  That probably applies more to the Gainesville location than to the one in Dade City.  Also, students tend to camp out with their laptops and books and monopolize seats for hours...and some of them have the nerve to not even buy anything!  I often go out to places to study, and I usually take well over thirty minutes there.  But if I'm done with what I had initially purchased and it looks as if I may need to stay there a little longer, I'll make a point of going back up to the counter and buying something else.  That I thinks soothes the worries of anyone working there who thinks that I am trying to take advantage of their seating hospitality.  After all, they're in it to make money and have a right to ensure good available seating for paying customers...

Friday, August 16, 2013

They're He-e-re!

Earlier this afternoon I was riding south on Interstate 75, which skirts the western end of Gainesville.  I got on it at Exit 390, which was the furthest north exit for my home town.  I passed Exit 387, which connects with Newberry Road and the Oaks Mall areas.  Then, less than three minutes later was Exit 384, which leads to Archer Road and the region of student apartments and condos.  Its northbound exit was so backed up that there was stopped traffic going well into the interstate lane.  It had begun: the annual return of University of Florida students by the thousands!

I'm sure this new collection of students will seem even younger than the previous ones (funny how that works).  Most of them will be confined more or less to the University campus, their own apartments/dorms/condos, and the surrounding shopping areas.  But when it comes to going to Starbucks again, I know I'll have an almost impossible task of finding indoor seating...because they'll be he-e-re, too!

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Egyptian Violence Dismaying

Like many other people, I am very dismayed at what is happening in Egypt, with the elected Muslim Brotherhood overthrown by the military and massive violence intensifying between protesters and the police/army, resulting in many deaths and injuries.  Each side accuses the other of provoking the violence, and nobody is backing down.  And with such a conflict, there are inevitably scapegoats that are wrongly blamed for the situation.  Christian churches are being attacked and destroyed, and the old standbys of Israel and its American ally are once again also being used as scapegoats to foment agitation and hatred against us.

It's true that the Muslim Brotherhood was democratically elected, but I have a problem with newly elected parties and/or individuals in countries without democratic traditions immediately taking actions after taking office to enact laws restricting or even outlawing political opposition.  It is a widespread problem.  I remember Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe doing this as well as Russia's Vladimir Putin and Venezuela's late Hugo Chavez.  Apparently the (former) president Mohamed Morsi was trying to consolidate his power this way as well, and it didn't sit well with the military.

The Muslim Brotherhood is not going away, and the government's actions against it may officially marginalize it and its members while making it more radical and violent.  On the other hand, there is a sizable portion of Egypt's voting population that supported this organization in the last election, and whatever prompted them to give them their support needs to be taken into account by whatever party that holds the reins of political power...

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Entering Local Population Congestation Zone

The summer still technically has more than a month to go, and certainly the oppressive heat and humidity that typifies it where I live is going to linger for a considerable time as well.  But in one important sense, for me, summer in one of its more positive manifestations is about to crash down to a merciless, bitter end...starting around now and then dramatically spiking in effect next Wednesday.  School is starting again.

No, I am not attending any school right now.  And I'm not driving either of my children to school in the morning or picking them up in the afternoon.  Those days are done, although who knows whether or not I'll someday decide to "go back" to enter a graduate level program.  The main effect of school returning will be the overwhelming congestion on two fronts: the return of University of Florida students by the tens of thousands as well as the return of public school, with its rush hours and buses stopping everywhere in the middle of the road.  Santa Fe College in the northwestern corner of town contributes a lot to the crowded streets as well.

With both UF and public schools, I particularly feel the congestion nowadays with my current work schedule as I leave my workplace at 7:30 AM and drive up a street, first passing through intense university student traffic in the southwestern part of town and then past schools and residential areas clogged up with buses and parents-with-kids (and slowdown school zones).  So next Wednesday it will begin anew...

There is another aggravation associated with the resumption of school, and it involves mainly the returning University and Santa Fe College students.  They tend to take all of the seats at the various Starbucks and other coffee houses in town, often camping out for hours there and sometimes not even buying anything.  Of course, there is a place that these students tend to overlook: McDonald's, which always seems to have plenty of seating and provides good-tasting, less expensive coffee anyway.  They also tend to steer clear of doughnut shops, which are more the habitats of gabby seniors.  Looks like I might as well start with these places if I want some assurance of seating when I go out to study...

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Convention Center Enormous, Want to Run in It

The above (regrettably) slightly blurry photograph is of a very small section of just one of the buildings in the Orange County Convention Center, located on the southwestern outskirts of Orlando, Florida along International Drive.  I was there at a convention earlier this month with Melissa.  We stayed at the Embassy Suites, just a mile walking distance up the road.  The hotel was large, but this convention center astonished me by its enormity.  I mean, I could design my own marathon course within its confines running on the comfortable carpeting up and down miles of seemingly endless hallways while running the inner perimeters of the humongous rooms that they access.  And all of this would take place in very comfortable air conditioning!  Of course, this is just a fantasy...I'd have to get rid of all those pesky people first and then have this property all to myself in order to run any distance there.  But it is still appealing when I consider how utterly unpleasant outdoor running is during this staggeringly hot summer in Florida...

Monday, August 12, 2013

Summer Heat So Stifling, Alerts Issued

I just saw a weather alert for northeastern Florida and southeastern Georgia, and I'm not surprised.  It was to warn people of excessive heat.  No kidding.  I had just been to my local gym (Gainesville Health and Fitness Center) and run 6.2 miles on the treadmill without any problem in the air-conditioned environment there. But after the run, when I stepped out of the place to walk the few yards outside to my car, I thought this heat is almost unbearable, just being out in it for a couple of minutes.  I managed to get the car slightly cooled down on the drive home, but once again, after I parked and got out to walk the few feet to my front door, the heat was hard to withstand.  The temperatures are in the mid to upper 90's but the heat index has it around 104-105 degrees.

It has been a while since I have run any appreciable distance outside, on the road like I used to so much in the past.  The night is awful, too.  When I drove to work at a little past ten last night, the temperature was 82...and the humidity was stifling.  When I went out of my workplace building on my lunch break at 5 AM, it felt like a blanket covering everything outside, the air felt so heavy.  Yuck!

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Planetarium and Perseids

Friday afternoon I woke up with a sense of purpose.  This time around I wouldn't forget the weekly planetarium show that Santa Fe College put on Friday evenings.  There were two shows, the first at 7 PM a look at the sky and interesting features and the second, at 9, more or less a light show done to the tune of Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon album.  I chose the former, going there again with Melissa.  James Albury of the Miami Space Transit Planetarium was there again as well, presenting the show.  He reiterated some things from our visit there three weeks ago and showed where the planets and moon would be seen for the next few days (Venus and Moon were close to each other in the early evening sky Friday tonight).  Albury had also brought in for display a 75-pound meteorite, composed of iron and nickel...and very magnetic...and very dense and heavy.  Melissa got a photo of it, as well as one of the facility's two projectors, this one the simpler non-digital model that Albury used for Friday's show.  The digital projector, he told me after the show, had the ability to show the movements of stars against the sky's background over spans of hundreds and thousands of years.  But for Friday we stuck with the analog one.

I'm going to try to make at least a monthly habit of dropping by the planetarium to see what's going on.  This month, of course...and the reason for the meteorite...was August's Perseid meteor shower, which I was just outside observing (at 3 in the morning).  The peak observing nights would have been tomorrow, but I'll be at work then.  In any event, I stood out there in my freshly mowed back yard under ideal cloudless conditions eyeballing the constellation Perseus for a good twenty-to-twenty-five minutes.  For my trouble I saw one clear meteor, a pretty bright and very brief streak of light left of Perseus in the vacant part of the sky between Perseus and Polaris known as the constellation Camelopardalis.  That was at 3:18.  Well, that's one more meteor than I believe I've ever seen with this, the supposedly biggest meteor shower of  the year...


Saturday, August 10, 2013

More Running Mileage, But Avoid Summer Heat

Earlier today I woke up as usual in the afternoon and tried to figure out the best way to get my running in.  The weather was very hot and not conducive to this kind of exertion, although in the past I wouldn't have had second thoughts about running in it, even for long distances.  But now is now, and instead Inwent to my local gym to run in air conditioning.  Later, though, I did mow my back yard in the 95-degree heat.  It seems that my run didn't tire me out at all, but that lawn mowing exhausted me terribly.

In the last two days I have run 7.6 and 6.7 miles, quite an uptake in the mileage.  The right foot doesn't seem to be causing me problems like it used to, but still I have to consider the rest of my body and how it responds to a higher, level of training.  No sense in overdoing it...

Friday, August 9, 2013

Obama Petulantly Snubs Putin

As the G-20 gathering in Saint Petersburg, Russia approaches next month, President Obama has regrettably taken a page from counterproductive actions that previous administrations have adopted.  He has canceled a planned summit meeting with Russia's president Vladimir Putin, immediately on the heels of that country's granting of temporary asylum to turncoat/whistleblower (depending on your point of view) Edward Snowden.  Obama mentioned other issues beside the Snowden asylum, such as stringent new Russian anti-gay laws passed under the pretext of protecting children.  But the obvious factor tipping the scales in favor of shunning this important country's leader was the asylum.

One of the worst human rights violators in recent memory, China under Mao Zedong, had shut itself off from the West (and even the fellow Communist Soviet bloc for that matter) in the 1960's.  But American president Richard Nixon, seeing the bigger picture, sent his envoy Henry Kissinger there in 1969 to open up relations between the two nations.  And this was in the middle of their Cultural Revolution, which makes any human rights issues going on right now in Russia seem trivial by comparison.  On the other extreme, President Carter in 1979 declared that the U.S. would boycott the Summer Olympics the following year in Moscow as a knee-jerk protest reaction to the Soviet Union's invasion of Afghanistan.  That accomplished nothing besides punishing American athletes whose window of opportunity to achieve international recognition within their often-obscure sports came and went.  The USSR stayed in Afghanistan throughout the 1980's.  Maybe in retrospect they should have remained there.  Then, just a few years ago, the Dubya-Bush administration openly snubbed Iran's asinine former president Ahmadinejad, even going so far as the president's wife Laura Bush turning away from him when he was physically close by just to avoid acknowledging his existence.  Obama was going to change all that, though, with the philosophy that it was better to engage with your adversary than to cut off direct communications. I remember him back when he shook the hand of Venezuela's controversial president, the late Hugo Chavez, early in his first term.  Unfortunately, Obama seems to have forgotten his principle of engagement and reverted to petulant (and silly) Carter and Dubya shunning behavior...

It might be said that Obama can talk with Putin anytime he wants, or vice versa, just by picking up the phone, and that the canceled summit meeting was just a public relations/political show.  If so, then why not cancel the entire G-20 summit as well? Isn't all of it essentially just a lot of political posturing to prop up the regimes of the various countries involved by making their flawed leaders appear to be effective international statesmen?  What a joke...

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Denomination Rumination

Earlier this week I attended the annual convention of a major Pentecostal Christian denomination.  Religion was not the direct reason for my attendance...but it does figure into things to a degree.  I'm not Pentecostal, either, but that wasn't necessarily a major factor in my reactions to the event. Apart from being amazed at the vastness of the convention hall we went to (Orange County Convention Center West), I experienced being inundated by the sheer number and intensity of humanity around me.  I also ran into some notions about "real" Christianity that I've experienced in the past, not just from this denomination either...

The preeminent message of this convention was BELIEVE...in Jesus Christ of course...and you will be saved and live eternally in his presence.  I dig it...this is the essence of Christianity as I see it. But then I had to be inundated by loud, loud, LOUD services that seemed more bent on piercing my eardrums than getting the message across or worshiping God.  This denomination openly distinguishes itself as being a living church...as opposed to all those other "dead" churches out there.  Apparently, extreme loudness is a prerequisite to being "alive" here.  It made me wish for a return to the monastic system when monks took oaths of silence for long stretches of time.  Also, being expected to stand up for very long periods in cramped quarters during the praise worship just made my legs ache badly (and I'm a runner!).  But see, that's "living" and I guess "sitting" and worshiping that way would be "dead".  So the events already were getting under my skin and actually interfering, not helping, me to get into a more spiritual mental framework.  But their beliefs, as well as the beliefs of many denominations and churches are such that they demand for a large mass of believing people to cram physically together in a space in order to enhance the presence of the Lord...talk about worshiping according to a formula.

The main focus of this denomination is missionary work, and although America-birthed, it now has many more members in other countries than it does domestically.  I am on board with religions being allowed and welcome to advertise and promote themselves through missionary work, although truth be told, I don't notice people in Christian-based Western societies showing that much openness to Islam or Eastern faiths expanding their numbers among THEM.

I have a different kind of issue with all that I've heard, though, and it concerns not just this denomination but others as well.  I happen to believe that one of the main problems facing our society in America these days is not workaholics overdoing it trying to materially better themselves, but on the contrary more and more people, especially the young, living in an economically dependent state and doing little or nothing to sustain themselves through work (which is Biblically important, according to the Apostle Paul) and rejecting employment opportunities when they do surface because they don't dovetail with their interests.  But when I hear testimonies, I get the message that somehow if you're a responsible, mature person who goes to work, earns your money, provides a home for yourself and your family, and occasionally likes to enjoy some recreation, then that's idolatry...worshipping the all-mighty dollar...and that you're going nowhere with your life.  I see all these young people growing up and being shunted off to Bible colleges...and then going into voluntary missionary work that depends on sponsorships from others.  I don't suppose that this is necessarily a bad thing in itself...please try to understand...I just resent the judgement I feel marginalizes ME as I responsibly live my own working life...which actually tangibly contributes to the functioning of my own society! But the mindset I detected at this convention is that unless you're doing something that has "Jesus" openly and clearly stamped all over it, then you're just wasting your life, spinning your wheels in the fallen secular world and in doing so denying the Lord.

One more thing: I am tired of denominations rolling out the number figures and computing the number of "Christians" in a given area by reciting their own membership numbers there.  In the early 1990's I ran across a Southern Baptist brochure calling for outreach in my own home state of Florida, where there were reported to be (then) nine million lost souls.  In other words, nine million unbelievers... as well as Catholics, Lutherans, Episcopalians, and any other non-Southern Baptist professing Christians.  Talk about living in a bubble. This denomination in their big convention did something very similar, equating their worldwide membership with the number of people saved through Jesus.   

It sounds like I'm coming down heavily on this particular denomination, but I'm not.  I'm happy that these people feel joy and purpose in their lives.  They stand for virtuous behavior and are against crime and sexual and drug abuse.  God bless them all.  I'd just like someone out there who is a Christian big-shot to accept me the way I am without regarding me as someone who needs to be changed...

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Nix the Regret, Take Responsibility for the Present

I think one of the biggest delusions that some people hold onto in their lives is that their opportunities have passed them by.  Often people will look back on their adolescent and early adult years and harp with intense regret on decisions they made then that they now believe cut them off forever from attaining their dreams, especially in the area of careers.  But in truth, opportunities abound throughout one's lifetime for returning to those dreams; but it does take a personal transformation of a radical nature for many of these to see themselves as empowered and responsible for their own destinies and to behave in a positive and proactive way, rather than with the passive, critical, and reactive mindset that they have deeply become habituated to.

In fact, it makes no difference whether one got it "right" from the beginning, had great early success, or had personal obstacles to their ambitions.  It's a universal characteristic of a viable, individual, sentient being that when things aren't working out the way we want, then we, as personally responsible individuals, have to figure out how to change our situations for the better and then act on them.  Over and over and over again, throughout our lives! And the best time to realize that is RIGHT NOW...

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Cool Disney Promo Video in Orlando

In the hotel I am currently staying at in Orlando, Channel 42 has instantly become my favorite...and all it does it play the same short program repeatedly.  But the subject and tone of this program has great appeal: an introduction to Walt Disney World for visiting tourists.

No, this time around I'm not visiting Walt Disney World.  But I have some pretty vivid memories of past visits, starting back in 1973 with my sister and some of her friends and progressing through the years to times with my adult family.  Looking back, it's been a while since my last visit, back in 2004.  Since that time, according to this little TV show, the Magic Kingdom added a New Fanatasyland section while the MGM Studios Park name was changed to Hollywood Studios.  And it looks as if that Downtown Disney section has grown, although I've never visited it.

But aside from the positive vibes I got from the announcer as she presented the different attractions (and going on many of the rides), I got a kick out of reliving some of those experiences in the parks I enjoyed.  Like Big Thunder Mountain Railroad and Splash Mountain in the Magic Kingdom and the Tower of Terror and Rock & Roller Coaster in "Hollywood" Studios.  Plus, I was reminded of other rides that the video didn't show, like those cool ones at Epcot (especially the ride inside the big golf ball) and the Blizzard Beach superslides...

Monday, August 5, 2013

Dolphins Exhibition Loss Disappointing

I know it's just an exhibition game, with no bearing on the official standings or playoff status.  And it's the FIRST exhibition game of the season at that, so the fact that the Miami Dolphins lost this game last night to the Dallas Cowboys shouldn't be that big.  But as I sat there I could tell that Miami has an very long way to go before it can boast of being a playoff-calibre team.  The final score was close, 24-20...but I want them to be successful and that means WIN GAMES, dang it.  And I also want them to show off their improvement to the nation, so this being a nationally televised game didn't help, either.

But still we're dealing with a team that wasn't completely out there on the field, either.  Many players are trying to make the squad and the coaching staff has to have them out there to see who's best qualified...not just to start, but also to be on the bench ready to fill in when events demand.  So the regular starters weren't always out there (but neither were Dallas' either). 

In 2007, the year the Dolphins went 1-15, they had a pretty good exhibition season, and hopes were up that this would translate into regular season success.  It didn't...and I have to realize that it's best to wait and evaluate this year's Miami team on how it does when the games actually do count...

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Zimmerman/Martin Case Examined

It's been a little while since the verdict was read that acquitted George Zimmerman of the murder of Trayvon Martin, so now I think enough time has passed for me to stand back and look at this case.  Some observations...

--Many, especially on the political left like Al Sharpton, framed this entire case almost solely in terms of race.  Trayvon was racially profiled and followed like a crime suspect when he was just legitimately and purposefully walking down the street, minding his own business.  I happen to agree with Sharpton to the degree that Zimmerman appeared to presume guilt upon Martin largely from his race (that's called prejudice, by the way).  But the problem here is larger...

--I've gone running around my own neighborhood, and I'm not black.  No, I'm just some small middle-aged dumpy looking white dude with jogging threads...no hoodies are involved.  Yet I have experienced on a number of occasions the eerie, creepy feeling of seeing vehicles slowing down when they approach me and then linger around, often for several minutes, as I run down the road.  Maybe they're not all neighborhood vigilantes like George Zimmerman, but it scares me a little to think that people safely locked in their own enclosed motor vehicles, possibly if not probably armed, would view a vulnerable pedestrian such as myself to present any kind of danger.  To me, a legitimate neighborhood patrol would make a priority of challenging strange vehicles instead of relatively helpless people walking (or running) down the street.  But in any case, this problem isn't completely about race, although I'll be quick to admit that blacks have a much tougher time with this unwarranted scrutiny and suspicion.

--After the trial, a panelist guy on Fox's The Five show...the obnoxious and utterly humorless one sitting in the middle, angrily stressed that the trial had nothing to do with the Florida 2006 Stand Your Ground law.  But the fact is that the instruction that the judge gave the jury was directly from this law, which gave so much latitude to the defendant that all that was needed for a not guilty verdict was that he "felt" at some point like his life was in danger.  I wonder whether Martin would have been accorded the same latitude under the legal system as Zimmerman had he prevailed in the struggle and Zimmerman perished...

--This entire tragedy would have been avoided if an armed man, George Zimmerman, had decided to follow police instructions and not stalked Trayvon Martin in his vehicle...and then not gotten out and approached his imagined adversary with the full knowledge that he himself was carrying a loaded, lethal weapon.  Zimmerman completely provoked the confrontation, but the trial seemed to stress only the final fight between the two...

--I guess from the above that you can tell I'm not a big George Zimmerman fan.  But here is when I have to scratch my head at my own country's system of justice.  Or should I say, two systems.  A lot of people in the U.S. were outraged when Amanda Knox, who had been tried and convicted of murder in Italy but later released to return here after that conviction was overturned, was recently accused again of the same crime...something that other countries do but not the United States, with our prohibition against "double jeopardy".  But that's not entirely accurate, since in America one can be acquitted of a crime within the criminal system but still possibly have to undergo another trial in the civil courts: O.J. Simpson is a case in point.  And I think that Zimmerman will probably be subjected to a similar ordeal, which is a boon to lawyers but makes little sense to me.

Well, maybe I didn't get around to saying everything I felt about this case, but I think I got in the major stuff...

Saturday, August 3, 2013

7.3 Mile Run

Today I managed a 7.3 mile run, another step in my attempt to return to half-marathon form.  It's a delicate balancing act with me not wanting to put too much stress on my right foot, as well as taking care to avoid the worst of this oppressively hot and humid summer we've been experiencing in northern Florida.  Could I have run further than I did today?  Probably, but as I said, there's little point in overdoing it to the point when I am forced to take more time off from running and then getting out of shape...

Follow-Up on Yesterday's Gutfeld Article

Yesterday I wrote how I missed the admittedly flawed (who isn't) but very talented Greg Gutfeld on Fox News Channel's The Five afternoon program.  And he was absent on it today as well, as I quickly checked and just as quickly changed channels.  But the reason he wasn't on it yesterday may well have to do with the fact that just a few hours later he guest hosted The O'Reilly Factor, in my opinion far out-performing that show's title "character" (whom Al Franken deemed to be a "lying, blotchy bully").   The question I have is whether Gutfeld will be on his own Red Eye show at 11 tonight...

Friday, August 2, 2013

Gutfeld Missed on The Five

After sleeping well into the afternoon today (I work the graveyard shift, so this is normal), I brewed myself a tasty cup of caramel drizzle coffee on my Keurig, sat down to finish my Times Square jigsaw puzzle, and turned the TV on Fox News to watch The Five.  A show like The Five, which on this "fair and balanced" channel consists of, naturally, five panelists, four of whom are ardent conservatives and one lukewarm moderate/liberal, normally would antagonize me to no end.  But I have found myself gravitating toward one of those right wing panelists: the very talented Greg Gutfeld.  In spite of his extreme partisanship against President Obama (whom I happily voted for twice) and Democrats in general, this guy is quite entertaining and witty.  Unfortunately, the rest of the panel stinks to high heaven (including its sorry excuse of a "liberal").  Today, the stench was unbearable as Gutfeld was absent, replaced by an equally conservative dude displaying no discernible personality.  Time to change the channel, which I did.

Greg Gutfeld is better on his other show on Fox, titled Red Eye, which he more or less controls and has guests that meld better into his style (like the comical Bill Schultz, for example).  The political atmosphere is still typically Fox right-wing Demophobic, but I get it and don't take things personally in spite of disagreeing with many of the opinions dominating it.  But Gutfeld wisely knows that at some point you just have to step back and laugh, something that far too many folks in the business on both sides of the political spectrum don't seem to be capable of grasping. 

Maybe Greg's on vacation, he had a schedule conflict...or just wanted to take the day off.  In any event, I'm off myself tonight from work, so I think I'll check to see if Red Eye is on and if he's on it...

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Adjusting My Reading Priorities

I've mentioned before on this blog that I am currently in the process of reading George R.R. Martin's fantasy series A Song of Fire and Ice.  I just finished book #1, title A Game of Thrones, and am now well into the second, A Clash of Kings.  Knowing that five books have been published in this series, I wanted to "catch up" by reading through them all expediently.  Now, though, I have second thoughts...

Martin's acclaimed series is a little like Stephen King's Dark Tower series in that both authors have taken their sweet little time in writing and publishing the next installment (although King did finish the last three volumes of his series in a two-year flurry of writing).  With A Song of Fire and Ice, here is Martin's timetable so far:

A Game of Thrones: 1996
A Clash of Kings: 1999
A Storm of Swords: 2000
A Feast for Crows: 2005
A Dance with Dragons: 2011

The sixth volume is supposedly to come out in 2014; who knows when the seventh and final volume will eventually be released.  The bottom line on this is that there is no point with me rushing through the first five volumes only to wait a long time for the remainder.  Better it would be, I think, for me to take my own sweet time reading the series!

So instead of daily reading I'm going to read Martin twice a week...and use the other days to embark on new reading adventures!